EQUITY Tip of the Month
According to the SMG group, the aggregate income of people with disabilities tops $1 trillion. This includes $220 billion in discretionary income. Here are a few tips on how to best market to the diverse individuals comprising the disability community:
1. Include people with disabilities in the earliest planning and development phase of the service or product.
For Training and Technical Assistance, contact: Thomas Foley, tom@wid.org 1.866.723.1201
1. Include people with disabilities in the earliest planning and development phase of the service or product.
- Strive to have people with different disabilities represented: one size does not fit all! Individuals who are blind, deaf, developmentally delayed or use a wheelchair, all face different issues and can provide valuable insight.
- Create advisory committees including people with disabilities to evaluate company-wide accommodations, facilities, and adaptive devices.
- Support community efforts to promote full inclusion of people with disabilities in all aspects of the community. This provides the opportunity to link your brand in a more global manner.
- Ensure that your organization has aggressive recruiting and employment policies for people with disabilities.
- Remember that for every person with a disability, there are several friends and family members sensitive to the issues of inclusion: these people also need products and services.
- Be sure to use people with various disabilities as models and actors.
- Include language which specifically addresses the needs of individuals with disabilities. (Example: The World Institute on Disability is wheelchair accessible, and provides reasonable accommodations such as sign language interpreters and materials in alternative formats upon request).
- Include current assistive devices and technologies used by people with disabilities.
- Show examples of accommodating specific and varying disability needs. (Sign language interpreters, Braille materials, accessible counters or workstations.)
- Target publications, websites and conferences which serve people with disabilities.
- Develop relationships with national disability organizations to promote brand awareness.
- All employees must be equipped to effectively serve people with disabilities.
- Customer service training should include a component of disability awareness training.
- Ensure that your facilities meet current accessibility guidelines.
- Strive for universal design in physical locations. Remember: this will benefit people with disabilities, the elderly and individuals with temporary impairments.
- Provide information and publications in alternative formats such as large print, Braille, and electronic text.
- Invite diverse representatives from the disability community to review your programs and facilities. Ask for direct feedback and suggestions for how to improve access.
- Be sure to include disability awareness in annual diversity trainings.
- Ensure that your web site, tools and internet products are accessible to people with disabilities.
- Nationally recognized disability awareness training
- Comprehensive educational trainings for the financial and asset building communities
- Technical assistance for disability organizations interested in asset building programs
For Training and Technical Assistance, contact: Thomas Foley, tom@wid.org 1.866.723.1201